. The castellated and domestic architecture of Scotland, from the twelfth to the eighteenth century. Fig. 107.—Hatton House. Plan of Ground Floor. walls measure on the ground floor from 8 to 10 feet in thickness. Thesouth wall seems to have been thinned in connection with the building ofthe later mansion. The ground floor was vaulted with a lofty vault,including two stories in the main portion, and a lower vault in the wing,in which there is, as usual, a vaulted entresol. The narrow corkscrew THIRD PERIOD — 270 HATTON IIOrSR. HATTON HOUSE — 271 TIIIUD PKRIOD stair, which adjoins the entrance d


. The castellated and domestic architecture of Scotland, from the twelfth to the eighteenth century. Fig. 107.—Hatton House. Plan of Ground Floor. walls measure on the ground floor from 8 to 10 feet in thickness. Thesouth wall seems to have been thinned in connection with the building ofthe later mansion. The ground floor was vaulted with a lofty vault,including two stories in the main portion, and a lower vault in the wing,in which there is, as usual, a vaulted entresol. The narrow corkscrew THIRD PERIOD — 270 HATTON IIOrSR. HATTON HOUSE — 271 TIIIUD PKRIOD stair, which adjoins the entrance doorway, leads to the various floors andcontinues to the top, where there is a flat roof. The capehouse seemspartly ancient, and is furnished with an roof of the seventeenthcentury, having a vane with monogram E. C. M. (see Sketch, Fig. 200).The entrance porch of the seventeenth-century house is on the east sideand is approached by a straight avenue about three-quarters of a mile


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectarchitectur, booksubjectarchitecture